Gents,
As your steering and suspension cycles, many geometric changes occur in your truck's front end. There are four commonly-known dimensions that are related to the effects of wheel offset/backspacing. These are camber, caster, toe, and ackerman. There is also some black magic that has to do with the angles at which the counterbores for your ball joints are machined, the way the suspension can move independently side to side and variations in production tolerances. All of these static dimensions change as you sweep your steering side to side and the suspension cycles up and down. I don't have the time to describe what these dimensions are and how they affect these trucks. It would take a full dissertation to explain all this.
You can learn the same thing by doing this: Put your truck on a lift, take the springs and wheels and tires off but leave the shocks and bump stops in place and bump and droop your axle housing 100 times from middle pressure, 100 times from driver side pressure, 100 times from passenger side pressure and measure each cycle in 1/8" increments. Now do the same thing again with wheels and tires in place. Measure each 1/8" increment while sweeping the steering . 5 degrees at a time. Document all the data in an organized fashion and plug it into a computer on an Excel spreadsheet. Using this data, make a 3D model of the whole thing on CAD. Input various wheel/tire dimensions and computer analyze the repercussions, then you will begin to understand how complex the front of a 5 link actually is.
Suffice to say that if you use a wheel that is not exactly correct for your truck, you will start to mess things up. Your truck's steering and suspension will not work properly, performance will suffer and eventually something will fail.
This is not stupid marketing jargon and b. s. spewed forth just to sell stuff. It's simply the truth.
Now, I know someone will say, "I've been running such and such a wheel with 4. 5" backspacing for ten years and everything is still fine. " Maybe that's true if all you're using your truck for is picking up groceries for grandma.
I'll tell you this right now: Greg Boardman and I could put a 4. 5 or 5 inch backspaced, non-hubcentric wheel on one of our trucks and obliterate the front end in five minutes by driving "normally" through the desert.
Proper wheel dimensions are that critical for what we do - and for what anyone does - it just takes longer for the repercussions to appear.
Aside from the instant rubbing problems the wrong wheel will cause, the long-term effects can be grave. We can simply take five minutes in the desert to do what the average grocery-getter will do in five years.
Using a wide, off road tire on the proper wheel will not, aside from the greater stresses more weight and traction can impose, damage any OE components on your truck. However, wider tires may cause rubbing on the control arms - especially on the passesnger side of Dodge Rams that are up 2. 5" in front. With longer coils, the track bar causes the axle housing to move to the driver's side a bit. This places the larger tire closer to the passenger side control arms, causing a slight rub at full lock. Not all Dodge Rams manifest this problem. This inconsistancy has to do with the imprecise way in which the steering knuckle stops are machined at the factory. Older Rams had adjustable steering stops - a simple nut and bolt. On 3rd gen trucks a bit of rubbing at full-lock is a non-issue, since the control arms are boxed and smooth on the bottom. Second Gen control arms make a hideous noise when the large lugs of off road tires hit them because the arms are flanged outward and open on the bottom.
The cure for this is simple: drill a 1/4" hole in your steering knuckle and tap in a #12 U-Drive screw. This will limit your steering sweep by about 1. 5 degrees and usually solve your rubbing problem. You can do this on both sides if you want. Send a SASE padded envelope to KORE and I'll send you these parts free of charge. I don't care whose tire, wheel or lift you're running.
If you prefer, you can also simply drill and tap your steering stops and install a bolt and nut to adjust your steering sweep as you desire. This is a quick and easy retrofit.
Bottom line: If all you are concerned with is aesthetics, then it really doesn't matter what wheel you use. If you care about doing it the right way, and are concerned with the longevity of your components, use the right wheel.
It's not big rubber that will damage your truck; it's the wrong wheels.
Best Regards,
Kent Kroeker
KORE